Tortefontaine lies southwest of Hesdin, on the D136 road with the Varnette, a small tributary of the Authie flowing through it. The rural agricultural commune has three hamlets, Le Molinel, Le Bout de Bas and Saint-Josse-au-Bois.
The commune is crossed by the Authie, a natural watercourse of 108.18 km, which has its source in the commune of Coigneux, located in the department of the Somme, and which flows into the English Channel between the communes of Berck and Fort-Mahon-Plage.
Etymology
The name comes from tortus "crooked" and fontana "fountain". The name is explained by the meanders of the course of the Authie which crosses the commune, a natural watercourse of 108.18 km, which has its source in the commune of Coigneux at a place called the "Fontaine du Rossignol", located in the department of the Somme, and which flows into the English Channel.
The name of the locality is attested in the forms Torta fontena (late eleventh century); Tortus fons (1125); Torta fontana (1137); Tortefontaine (1181); Tortefontene (1288); Tertefontaine (1384); Tortifontaines (1484); Torfontaines (1638); Torte-Fontaines (1720); Tortfontaine (1790)[4].
The ruins of the abbey of Dommartin. First built in 1161, the ruins are found in farmland.
17th / 18th century buildings and more ruins of the same.
Landscape
The commune is part of the western part of the "Val d'Authie landscape" as defined in the Atlas of the Landscapes of the Nord-Pas-de-Calais region, designed by the Regional Directorate for the Environment, Planning and Housing (DREAL).
This landscape, which concerns 83 communes, is bounded: to the south, in the department of the Somme, by the "landscape of Authie and Ponthieu, depending on the atlas of the landscapes of Picardy, and to the north and east by the landscapes of Montreuillois, Ternois and the landscapes of the Cambrian and Artesian plateaus. The border character of the Authie valley, today between the Pas-de-Calais and the Somme, dates back to the Middle Ages when it separated the kingdom of France from the Spanish Netherlands, to the north.
Its northern slope is steep and steep, while the southern slope offers gentler slopes. To the west, the river opens onto the Bay of Authie, typical of the Picardy estuary, and flows into the English Channel. With its vast estuary and the landscapes of the lowlands, the bay of Authie contrasts with the greener landscapes upstream.
The Authie, a deep cut in the artesian plateau, has created pronounced eco-landscape entities with a limestone plateau whose altitude varies from 100 to 163 m that extends on each side of the river. The altitude of the plateau declines from the Doullens region in the east (highest point at 163 m) to the Picardy lowlands in the west (less than 40 m). The bottom of the Authie valley, on the other hand, is covered with alluvium and peat. The Authie is a coastal river classified as a first-class watercourse where the dominant fish population is made up of salmonids. The land cover of the landscapes of the Authie Valley is made up of 70% under cultivation.